Light Seminars
March 23, 2011
L4H Seminar RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ 'Unveiling Physics in Biology by Optical Manipulation of Single Molecules'
L4H Seminar RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ 'Unveiling Physics in Biology by Optical Manipulation of Single Molecules'
RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ
Wednesday, March 23, 2011, 11:45. Seminar Room
RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ
IMDEA Nanociencia and Centro Nacional de Biotecnología (CSIC), Madrid, SPAIN
RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ
IMDEA Nanociencia and Centro Nacional de Biotecnología (CSIC), Madrid, SPAIN
The links between Physics and Molecular Biology were formerly understood in terms of the development of experimental techniques to image and understand molecular structures. With the advent of the single-molecule techniques, Physics have found a laboratory for complex phenomena at the molecular level inside the cell. From this viewpoint, our cells are microfactories made up of molecular nanomachines (proteins) coordinated, precise and with highly specialized tasks. The software and the transmission of information are determined by the nucleic acids. Force and torque, stress and strain or work are examples of mechanical, albeit stochastic, actions which are intimately linked to chemical reactions in the cell.
In this seminar we will first analyze the nanotools that we have already developed and those that are currently in progress. These techniques are thought to manipulate, both in vitro and in vivo, biomolecular ‘particles’ by means of electromagnetic fields (optical tweezers and magnetic manipulation). In a second part, we will focus on the specific biophysical research lines of our laboratory, which have to do with three fundamental scale levels in Biology, namely, the levels of the molecule, the organelle and the cell. We will present our work in structural transitions of nucleic acids, molecular motors and electrophysiology of organelles.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011, 11:45. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Melike Lakadamyali
In this seminar we will first analyze the nanotools that we have already developed and those that are currently in progress. These techniques are thought to manipulate, both in vitro and in vivo, biomolecular ‘particles’ by means of electromagnetic fields (optical tweezers and magnetic manipulation). In a second part, we will focus on the specific biophysical research lines of our laboratory, which have to do with three fundamental scale levels in Biology, namely, the levels of the molecule, the organelle and the cell. We will present our work in structural transitions of nucleic acids, molecular motors and electrophysiology of organelles.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011, 11:45. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Melike Lakadamyali
Light Seminars
March 23, 2011
L4H Seminar RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ 'Unveiling Physics in Biology by Optical Manipulation of Single Molecules'
L4H Seminar RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ 'Unveiling Physics in Biology by Optical Manipulation of Single Molecules'
RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ
Wednesday, March 23, 2011, 11:45. Seminar Room
RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ
IMDEA Nanociencia and Centro Nacional de Biotecnología (CSIC), Madrid, SPAIN
RICARDO ARIAS-GONZÁLEZ
IMDEA Nanociencia and Centro Nacional de Biotecnología (CSIC), Madrid, SPAIN
The links between Physics and Molecular Biology were formerly understood in terms of the development of experimental techniques to image and understand molecular structures. With the advent of the single-molecule techniques, Physics have found a laboratory for complex phenomena at the molecular level inside the cell. From this viewpoint, our cells are microfactories made up of molecular nanomachines (proteins) coordinated, precise and with highly specialized tasks. The software and the transmission of information are determined by the nucleic acids. Force and torque, stress and strain or work are examples of mechanical, albeit stochastic, actions which are intimately linked to chemical reactions in the cell.
In this seminar we will first analyze the nanotools that we have already developed and those that are currently in progress. These techniques are thought to manipulate, both in vitro and in vivo, biomolecular ‘particles’ by means of electromagnetic fields (optical tweezers and magnetic manipulation). In a second part, we will focus on the specific biophysical research lines of our laboratory, which have to do with three fundamental scale levels in Biology, namely, the levels of the molecule, the organelle and the cell. We will present our work in structural transitions of nucleic acids, molecular motors and electrophysiology of organelles.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011, 11:45. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Melike Lakadamyali
In this seminar we will first analyze the nanotools that we have already developed and those that are currently in progress. These techniques are thought to manipulate, both in vitro and in vivo, biomolecular ‘particles’ by means of electromagnetic fields (optical tweezers and magnetic manipulation). In a second part, we will focus on the specific biophysical research lines of our laboratory, which have to do with three fundamental scale levels in Biology, namely, the levels of the molecule, the organelle and the cell. We will present our work in structural transitions of nucleic acids, molecular motors and electrophysiology of organelles.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011, 11:45. Seminar Room
Hosted by Prof. Melike Lakadamyali
All Insight Seminars
Light Seminars
December 14, 2011
L4H Seminar TOMMASO FELLIN 'Optical Investigation of Neocortical Circuits with Structured Light Illumination by Phase Modulation'
Light Seminars
November 30, 2011
L4H Seminar EVA RITTWEGER 'Optical Microscopy with Nanoscale Resolution'
Light Seminars
November 4, 2011
L4H Seminar JOSEP DALMAU 'Syndromes and Mechanisms of Autoimmune Synaptic Encephalitides'
Light Seminars
November 2, 2011
L4H Seminar JOCHEN GUCK 'Dual-Beam Laser Traps in Biology and Medicine – When One Beam Is Not Enough'
Light Seminars
October 3, 2011
L4H Seminar* VASILIS NTZIACHRISTOS 'Illuminating Biomedical Discovery with Advanced Photonic Imaging'
Light Seminars
July 20, 2011
L4H Seminar JAN LAUFER 'In vivo small animal imaging using an all-optical photoacoustic scanner'
Light Seminars
July 11, 2011
L4H Seminar ALEKSANDRA RADENOVIC 'Photonics Tools for Single Molecule Biophysics'
Light Seminars
July 6, 2011
L4H Seminar SANTIAGO NONELL 'Singlet Oxygen in Photobiology: from Basic Science to Applications in Photodynamic Therapy'
Light Seminars
June 28, 2011
L4H Seminar MIQUEL BOSCH 'The Persistence of Memory: Two-Photon Imaging Reveals how Synapses Learn and Remember in Real Time'
Light Seminars
June 22, 2011
L4H Seminar ANDREW DUNN 'Optical Imaging of Cerebral Blood Flow'
Light Seminars
May 18, 2011
L4H Seminar ANABELA DA SILVA 'In vivo optical molecular imaging closer to clinical'
Light Seminars
May 4, 2011
L4H Seminar HAMID DEHGHANI 'Of Mice and Men: Adventures in Optical Imaging'
Light Seminars
April 20, 2011
L4H Seminar SULIANA MANLEY 'Quantitative Static and Dynamic Imaging with Photoactivatable Fluorescence'
Light Seminars
April 13, 2011
L4H Seminar* TONY WILSON 'Making Light Work in Microscopy'
Light Seminars
April 6, 2011
L4H Seminar JORDI SORIANO FRADERA 'Experiments on Patterned Neuronal Networks. Probing Cultures to Understand Brain Complexity'
Light Seminars
March 21, 2011
L4H Seminar BRETT BOUMA 'Cancer Screening and Surveillance with Optical Coherence Tomography'
Light Seminars
March 9, 2011
L4H Seminar DOUGLAS WEIBEL 'Membrane Curvature Controls Lipid Microdomain Formation and Protein Localization in Bacteria'
Light Seminars
February 28, 2011
L4H Seminar* MARTIN B. van der MARK 'Diffuse optical spectroscopy with very high collection efficiency'
Light Seminars
February 23, 2011
L4H Seminar* ILIAS TACHTSIDIS 'Measuring Brain Tissue Energy Metabolism Using Light'
Light Seminars
February 9, 2011
L4H Seminar MARK BATES 'Single-Molecule Localization Methods for Super-Resolution Fluorescence Microscopy'
Light Seminars
January 26, 2011
L4H Seminar JAMES SHARPE 'Imaging the Dynamics of Morphogenesis: from Dynamic to Static, from Hi-Res to Low'